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The Pre-Mortem

Imagine the project failed. Now work backwards. What killed it? Find the failure while you can still prevent it.

Post-mortems happen after the disaster. By then, it's too late. The pre-mortem flips the timeline - assume failure has already happened, then diagnose the cause. Prospective hindsight surfaces risks that optimism hides.

It's easier to explain failure than to predict it. Use that.

Assume the project failed. Now tell me why.

The Process

01

Set The Scene

Gather the team. Describe the project. Then say: "It's six months from now. The project has failed completely. It's a disaster." Make it vivid. Make it real.

02

Individual Brainstorm

Each person writes down reasons for the failure. Silent, independent, no discussion. This prevents groupthink and surfaces the concerns people might not say aloud.

03

Share & Cluster

Go around the room. Each person shares one reason. No debate yet - just collect. Group similar concerns. Keep going until all unique reasons are captured.

04

Prioritize

Vote on which failure modes are most likely and most damaging. Focus on the intersection: likely AND severe. You can't address everything.

05

Mitigate

For the top risks, ask: What would prevent this? What early warning signs should we watch for? Assign owners. Set tripwires.

Why It Works

The Psychology

Breaks Optimism Bias

We naturally assume our plans will work. The pre-mortem forces pessimism. Imagining failure makes it psychologically real - and real threats get addressed.

Legitimizes Doubt

In planning mode, expressing concerns feels like negativity. In pre-mortem mode, concerns are the assignment. The skeptic becomes the star, not the buzzkill.

Hindsight Is Easier

Predicting the future is hard. Explaining the past is easy. The pre-mortem exploits this asymmetry - by treating the future as past, we access explanatory power we don't have for prediction.

Prompts

Questions That Surface Risk

The Failure Modes

  • What assumption turned out to be wrong?
  • What did we not anticipate?
  • Where did coordination break down?
  • What resource ran out?
  • What stakeholder turned hostile?
  • What external event derailed us?

The Human Factors

  • Who burned out?
  • What warning did we ignore?
  • What uncomfortable truth did no one say?
  • Where did politics override reason?

The Execution Gaps

  • What took longer than expected?
  • What dependency failed?
  • What "simple" thing turned out to be hard?
  • Where did scope creep kill us?
When To Use

Timing The Pre-Mortem

Before Commitment

The best time is before resources are allocated. Pre-mortems are cheap when you can still walk away. After commitment, they become expensive truths.

At Major Milestones

The project changed. The team changed. The market changed. Re-run the pre-mortem. New information means new failure modes.

When Doubt Is Silenced

If optimism feels mandatory, something's wrong. The pre-mortem restores permission to worry. Healthy teams can imagine failure without panic.

Every failed project has a story. The pre-mortem writes that story before it happens - while there's still time to change the ending.

Optimism builds momentum. Pessimism builds robustness. You need both. The pre-mortem is how you access pessimism without killing morale.

Imagine the disaster. Then prevent it.